2017 Harvest

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

The British Columbia Farm Industry Review Board has declined a request to order a Langley, B.C. blueberry operation to cease its use of two propane cannons on the farm. The cannons are used to manage bird predation. A neighbour of the operation complained about the continuous firing of the timer-activated cannons, at one time daily between 6:30 a.m. and noon and from 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. The Board found that the farm used the cannons in accordance with the 2009 "Ministry Guidelines for the use of Audible Bird Scare Devices for South Coastal BC" and, therefore, such use constituted a protected "normal farm practice".

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John D. Goudy, Lawyer

John is a litigator whose practice is focused in the areas of commercial and environmental litigation, expropriation law, energy regulation, and regulatory offences. He is particularly interested in agricultural issues and the regulation of agricultural land use, and lives and works on his family’s cash crop farm north of London, Ontario with his wife and three kids.

ACI Published Author

Law of the Lands provides legal information of interest to landowners. If you require legal advice about your particular situation, please click on John's profile for contact information or visit scottpetrie.com.